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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

"No good comes from seal songs," says Finn's father. But Finn believes differently.

Finn loves to swim with the seals in a secret cove. He arrives at the cove one day and rescues a young seal tangled in netting. Finn wishes the seal could live on land. That night the seals sing. When Sheila, a mysterious girl no one has ever seen before, appears on the cannery docks, the fisher folk are uneasy. They believe the newcomer is a magical selkie, a shape changer.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      September 19, 2011
      A strong sense of place, sinewy prose, and an unusual blend of workaday life and fairy tale dreaminess distinguish Spalding’s (Secret of the Dance) Pacific Northwest fantasy. Finn, the son of a salmon fisherman, befriends and rescues a seal, then wishes out loud for her to take human form. Sure enough, a solemn girl in a long dress named Sheila appears, and Finn’s family’s salmon fishing takes a turn for the better. When Finn dismisses Sheila’s warnings and ventures into a terrible storm (“You’re just scared of the sea,” he scoffs), she gives up her human form to save him. “Finn lay asleep on the shingle. Protecting him, like a velvet blanket, was the seal. A fall frost sparkled across her back.” The oil paintings by Milelli (The Art Room) are composed, mosaiclike, of planes of saturated color that mimic the play of light across the water and the faces of the fishermen. The sober reality of the tweed caps of the men on the docks and the cannery’s wooden buildings anchor the story’s magical elements in a particularly piquant way. Ages 4–8.

    • Kirkus

      September 15, 2011

      Finn, a fisherman's son, befriends a seal who becomes his selkie friend until she gives up her human life to rescue him in a storm. 

      Drawing on the long tradition of selkie tales, Spalding (Solomon's Tree, 2002, etc.) weaves a new story set in a Canadian community where salmon fishermen use nets. Finn works with his father, but he finds time to swim and play, and he longs to hear a seal sing. After he frees one from a net and nurses it back to health, she not only sings, she turns into a girl, Sheila, who can live on land and be his best friend—just as he had wished. All goes well until he ignores her advice and rows into a storm. Sheila sings once more and slips back into the ocean to save him, but when selkies enter saltwater, they turned back into seals. The magical elements of this friendship story seem believable in context, and the bittersweet ending is appropriate. Within the third-person narration are lyrical passages summing up important story elements. The text is set on or opposite Milelli's dark, expressive oil paintings, which focus mainly on the characters, giving only a rough idea of their surroundings.

      Read aloud or alone, the storytelling and illustrations work well together, creating a memorable, satisfying whole. (Picture book. 5-9)

      (COPYRIGHT (2011) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)

    • School Library Journal

      January 1, 2012

      Gr 2-4-Spalding has located her selkie story in the salmon fishing grounds of Canada. She tells of a boy who loves to swim with seals and rescues one from an old net. Soon after, Sheila, a stranger child, appears and befriends Finn, though she is oddly loathe to let saltwater touch her skin. After a time, Finn ventures out onto the water though Sheila warns him of a storm brewing. When he capsizes, she sacrifices her human form to save him. Milelli's oil paint illustrations do little to convey the magic Spalding tries to evoke. Angular, hard-edged swaths of color make both land- and seascapes sit heavily on the pages. The human figures pose stiffly and awkwardly, and when Finn is sitting in his skiff, supposedly buffeted by powerful winds, his hair is barely ruffled.-Miriam Lang Budin, Chappaqua Public Library, NY

      Copyright 2012 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • The Horn Book

      January 1, 2012
      After Finn, a young fisher, rescues a magical shape-shifting seal (or selkie), she takes the form of a human girl to join him on land. When a sudden storm comes up, she saves Finn's life but then must return to the sea forever. Dramatic oil paintings, particularly effective in their portrayal of the ocean and the selkie, illustrate the bittersweet, evocative story.

      (Copyright 2012 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

    • Kirkus

      September 15, 2011

      Finn, a fisherman's son, befriends a seal who becomes his selkie friend until she gives up her human life to rescue him in a storm.

      Drawing on the long tradition of selkie tales, Spalding (Solomon's Tree, 2002, etc.) weaves a new story set in a Canadian community where salmon fishermen use nets. Finn works with his father, but he finds time to swim and play, and he longs to hear a seal sing. After he frees one from a net and nurses it back to health, she not only sings, she turns into a girl, Sheila, who can live on land and be his best friend--just as he had wished. All goes well until he ignores her advice and rows into a storm. Sheila sings once more and slips back into the ocean to save him, but when selkies enter saltwater, they turned back into seals. The magical elements of this friendship story seem believable in context, and the bittersweet ending is appropriate. Within the third-person narration are lyrical passages summing up important story elements. The text is set on or opposite Milelli's dark, expressive oil paintings, which focus mainly on the characters, giving only a rough idea of their surroundings.

      Read aloud or alone, the storytelling and illustrations work well together, creating a memorable, satisfying whole. (Picture book. 5-9)

      (COPYRIGHT (2011) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)

Formats

  • OverDrive Read

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Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:3.1
  • Lexile® Measure:600
  • Interest Level:K-3(LG)
  • Text Difficulty:0-2

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